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Strategic Insurance Purchasing In The 21 st Century. ASTIN & Casualty Actuarial Society Seminar on Reinsurance July 12, 2001 1:15 – 2:00 PM. Kevin Bingham 860.543.7345 John Slusarski 860.543.7366. Deloitte & Touche. Introduction. Background Target audience Authors
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Strategic Insurance PurchasingIn The 21st Century ASTIN & Casualty Actuarial Society Seminar on Reinsurance July 12, 2001 1:15 – 2:00 PM Kevin Bingham 860.543.7345 John Slusarski 860.543.7366 Deloitte & Touche
Introduction • Background • Target audience • Authors • Evolution of Insurance Purchasing Decision • Strategic Insurance Purchasing, Why Now • Convergence: Options and Insurance • Dynamic Financial Analysis and Reinsurance • Strategic Insurance Purchasing in the 21st Century • Closing Thoughts
Evolution • Limited review of organization’s actual data • Purchase guaranteed cost policies • Retain risk/reflect organization’s own experience using different insurance programs • Large deductibles • Retrospectively rated policies • Benchmarking • Anticipated loss rate x payroll • Multiple of calendar payments • Limited scenario testing (deterministic) • Captives • “What if” scenarios for insurance purchases • Insurance exposure modeling (stochastic) • Frequency/severity modeling • 21st Century?
Strategic Insurance Purchasing, Why Now? • Financial community • Value At Risk (VaR), Economic Value Added (EVATM) • BASLE Accord – Expansion of Pillar 1 • CFA exams (quantitative methods, Monte Carlo simulation) • CNBC, Bloomberg, CNNFN , Internet • Clients (and auditors) asking for confidence levels • High profile examples/unique capital market solutions • Bowie bonds • Arby’s securitization • Innovative insurance solutions • Hardening market • Convergence of financial services industry • Dynamic Financial Analysis (DFA)
Convergence: Options and Insurance • Convergence of Financial Services Industry and terminology Actuary CFA • Leverage the growing financial knowledge of most risk managers, chief risk officers and corporate decision makers to explain the similarities of insurance and investment options. OR
Convergence: Options and Insurance A call option is the right, but not the obligation, to buy a security for a specified price (exercise price) on or before a specified date. Table 1 displays the value of a call option with a $70 exercise price (excluding transaction costs).
Convergence: Options and Insurance • Insurance programs can be viewed as combinations of purchased and sold call options: • The exercise price of the call option is equal to the client’s SIR, deductible or reinsurance attachment point • For EOL and AEOL contracts, the exercise price of the sold call option is equal to the attachment point plus the insured limit • The call options last for one year, with the expiration date equal to the last day of the accident year
Convergence: Options and Insurance • Table 2 displays a $250,000 SIR or large deductible using a call option with a strike price of $250,000.
Convergence: Options and Insurance • Much easier for most investment and risk managers to understand the importance of purchasing insurance strategically using the option analogy. • Although actual conversion is difficult, understanding insurance in terms of options is a helpful exercise for risk managers and actuaries. KEY POINT – Just as the fundamentals underlying stock and bond investments change each year, so do the insurance risks facing an organization (e.g., hardening market, acquisitions, new exposures, etc.).
DFA and Reinsurance - Background • The term DFA originated in the property-casualty insurance industry. • The objective was to provide an integrated system for evaluating major risk elements affecting a company’s overall financial performance and economic value. • Why the term DFA? • Dynamic: interaction of key variables under multiple scenarios and management actions. • Financial: use modern financial economics to project variables • Analysis: examine impact on both the economic value and financial statements1 of the firm. 1. Insurers prepare financials under two separate accounting methods; U.S. GAAP and Statutory accounting principles.
100 DFA and Reinsurance - Background • Past v.s. Future • Deterministic v.s. Stochastic: Expected Value100 v.s. Distribution Around Expected Value • Fragmented v.s. Integrated Approach to Risk Analysis • Integration of Internal and External Risk Factors • Time Horizons of Over One Year
Deterministic DFA # Policies 100 # Policies 100 Premium / Policy 20 X X Premium / Policy = Total Premium 2,000 20 X 1 - Operating Ratio X 1- Oper.Ratio .13 0.13 = Operating Profit 260 = Operating Profit 260 DFA and Reinsurance - Background
DFA and Reinsurance - Background Investments Underwriting Management Interventions BusinessStrategies Reinsurance
Financial Forecast 99% Confidence Level Historical Plan DFA and Reinsurance - Background x x Premiums 0 Ending Capital
DFA and Reinsurance - Variables • In simple terms, DFA models consider a set of external variables and a set of internal variables. • External variables - price takers: • Interest rate levels • Inflation rates • Capital market prices and total returns • Pricing cycles and price elasticities • Natural catastrophes • Changes in loss levels from case law, jury awards, claims consciousness, etc. • Internal Variables - management decisions: • Premium rate levels actions • Reinsurance program • Underwriting guidelines • Marketing plans and distribution mechanism • Outstanding liability reserve practices • Investment strategy • Expense management
DFA Applications • Reinsurance optimization • Reinsurance module from DFA model • Majority of DFA work done to date • Asset and liability hedging strategies • Investment portfolio management • Demutualization • Credit risk modeling • Operational risk modeling • SBU operational strategies and planning • Strategic options analysis for mergers and acquisitions • Risk adjusted capital management • Rating agency management • New products and market development • Tax optimization
Strategic Insurance Purchasing in the 21st Century • Mathematical modeling of all risk factors (DFA) • Enterprise risk management mitigates variability in financial results from ALL the organization’s major risks (i.e., not just insurance) • Insurance exposures • Asset returns (e.g., Intel example) • Projected sales • Production costs • Tax revenue • Examples • Captives • Insurance companies • Unique projects • Efficient frontier
Strategic Insurance Purchasing in the 21st Century • Answer key management questions • Insurance Specific • What is the organization’s annual insurance cost and the confidence level feeding financial plan? • What is the cost/benefit analysis for the insurance option selected versus other options (e.g., XOL versus AEOL, 250 SIR versus 500 SIR)? • What is the variability of the organization’s insurance costs? • How well is the company protected against catastrophic losses? • Enterprise wide focus • What is the confidence level feeding financial plan for all risks? • What circumstances may cause the company’s financial statements to be impaired (e.g., asset portfolio decline, top line revenue drop, multiple events occurring simultaneously)? • What investment mix and reinsurance protection produces the highest return for the lowest level of risk (i.e., efficient frontier)?
Closing Thoughts • “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” risk management approach no longer acceptable • Hardening market • Financial pressure from management/shareholders • Technology • Computer processing speed • @Risk, Crystal Ball, Excel • Ability to leverage financial “thought ware” • RiskMetrics and VaR • Investment community knowledge • Demand for quantitative enterprise risk management • Applying and leveraging DFA research/publicity
Closing Thoughts Manufacturing Insurance Banking Retail DFA EPD VaR EVA RAROC Ruin RBC BCAR